Showing posts with label west gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label west gallery. Show all posts

3.10.17

Demosthenes Campos: An Inconvenient Art

JAY BAUTISTA


         Art
Sprout 1
For his ninth solo exhibition Sibol, Demosthenes Campos continues to visually essay the dismal plight of our already dying environment through his quaintly abstract mixed media works. Using various industrial materials mostly intended for domestic construction structures, these assemblage however revolves around positively framed green statements and gentle reminders espousing faith, hope and resiliency for our uncertain future.




Campos softens his stance from the surly and macabre fables of his last offing. Tired of the norm and often considered archaic elements of painting, besides it being too toxic and long to dry, Campos impatiently prefers crafting these simple building supplies with basic thought processes expected similar to a pragmatic carpenter. As the urgency of his volatile message, his experiments transcend more than the ordinariness of the household functions of their concrete and chemical nature.



Priming his canvases with white wall paint for extra texture, he initially counters them with all-weather industrial paints for his preferred thinly applied hues. He then would mix acrylic paints with alcohol to melt the pigments then pour a hint of muriatic acid, which is the hardest to handle as it initially boils and eventually balloons in form. This process dampens the luminescence of colors, as he follows through by combining cement neutralizer with glue and water to slightly conceal the result. 

Erosion

He then exposes the worked on surface to the natural heat of the sun. Depending on his desired intensity, it is in the cement cracks that organically dictate his pieces. Espousing a sort of rusting or decomposing appearance, he often repeats the process until he gets his achieved crackling. Through these intended cracks his previous colors would hint and provide accents by peering through them. He traces some parts using graphite pencil and highlights his paints by retouching through various brushstrokes.

Deferring on the intent of his materials, on what about the degradation of our surroundings he feels strongly about, the instructions would vary from here. Physicality impacts content--a kind of do-it-yourself memento in saving Mother Earth--will soon emerge. He would add other media like doormats, artificial grass and other suggesting green symbolism; spikes to connote hindrances to progress like dire poverty or greediness of people; or the crisscrossing of ropes as political stance against land grabbing; or plastic price tags resembling as budding grass to impart small victories and new beginnings; or dried leaves as petals portraying lushness and optimism. The strength of Campos is his being a handyman’s familiarity with domesticated materials. 

Sprout 6
Employing persistence to his germinal idea, Campos finishes off with gesso, wood stains, latex, or elastomeric paints leaving up to which color compliments his compositions. Finalizing their three-dimensionality with emulsion to illuminate and protect the renewed painting.

Materiality dictates whatever behavior an artist preoccupies with or whatever representations he expresses his sentiments. Although his method remains complex, Campos seems unbound of the complexity of his artistic production. Paying attention to how it works, it is time or situation-based, as he reflects his familiarity to his preferred media by painstakingly juxtaposing his skills in breathing life through them. He re-frames the meaning of his objects to a higher aesthetic experience. However more than the personal or spectacular that is prevalent to the artworks in the current art scene,

Campos veers towards the sublime though saving the environment could be an easy theme tantamount to his task. As more artists respond to the immediate commercial demands of the art market, even fulfilling them to the hilt, Campos pursues his noble narratives by alerting and concerning us all. Being a father to his son, he has a responsibility and has devoted his body of work to this lofty cause.


It was during his college days at the Technological University of the Philippines that the young Campos honed his resourcefulness in art--the make-do attitude were taught and inculcated in them by professors who were also struggling artists themselves. Knowing how to contextualize time, a sense of rhythm permeates his canvases. Campos eschews a moment of reflection or a call to action defying the grim and determined manner of forceful protest in reforming climate change or global warming that he advocates. He instead contributes to the imagining of reality with a discerning visual language on a higher realm; conducting fresh logic of thinking in approaching artistic production beyond political dialectics and artistic research.

Sprout 3

He is constantly been challenged by the insistence of dialogues and the persistence of change by injecting multiple layers of identity and meaning. Enveloping an artistic encounter marked by these experiments and explorations, more innovated pieces concur and through each piece churned out, a more pedigreed practice by Campos transpires.

Doing art may not be the most decisive way of protecting and conserving our fragile earth. The indirect approach may even be inconvenient in viewing his art yet it is in this inconvenience that Campos has been revealing the truth in every well-effected story.


Sibol is ongoing at the West Gallery until October 21, 2017.

17.5.17

Arturo Sanchez Jr: Apocalypse Now

BY JAY BAUTISTA 


The past is knowledge
The present our mistake
And the future we always leave too late
I wish we’d come to our senses and see there is no truth
In those who promote the confusion for this ever changing mood.

My Ever Changing Moods
Style Council (1984)


One day everything will be gone at one fell swoop--we will no longer be here.


This factual eventuality has provoked artist Arturo Sanchez Jr. in Unearthed to further investigate our own near extinction by experiencing the various possibilities of resin in art. 


It was his cutouts etched in layered shifting narratives on mirrors that first gained attention for Sanchez; how he carefully composed by transferring each image to suit his desired effect on what it intently reflects to the viewer.


Again as objects of contemplation, Sanchez continues his collage of cutouts from many printing sources with the assumption of man’s inexistence on earth. Layered with resin, he compliments these images with ghoulish and macabre hues evoking an eerie mood reminiscent of the apocalypse being implied on us.  


Excavation Site (Panel 3)

Excavation Site was initially inspired from Steve Cutts’Man, a four-minute video on how man came to destroy his surroundings including himself. Sanchez always had the forced habit of collecting clutter and debris around him--how he likes things that slowly deteriorate or observe them as they physically disintegrate. With his collection accumulating, he thought of creating that ultimate “end of the world” scenario. Meticulously done like a fine draftsman that he is, Excavation Site is collage in three parts covered in clear-cut resin. Emanating a beautiful tragedy where everything will just be covered in debris. With grayish strokes resembling an impending melancholy in our midst, Sanchez reveals all of man’s folly and his greediness will be his own culprit and eventual downfall. With this exposition in ruins, all his secrets will self-destruct in the dustbin of history. 


New Found Specimen. Collage in Clear Cast Resin

With depopulating the earth and a breakdown of urban systems emerged New Found Specimen 1-4. Using huge quantity of images from several references making each perspective an emerging narrative, Sanchez’s imagination is limitless: ranging from flowers blooming from a clot of blood; a tree trunk morphs into another fabled being; a torso becomes a shelter inhabited by earthy creatures. Connoting an aesthetic honed from our diverse experiences of the everyday, he pours in resin into customized frames resulting in a realist play in abstraction. Sanchez would like to consider continuing this into other series in his next forays.




Enduring Decay is an unfolding surreal drama which involves a sculpture of a boy and girl morphed into a tight embrace on a mound full of animal bones and carcasses. A romantic interlude amidst this infatuated setting exuding beauty in impermanence. A lone mythical bird reminding us all that love is fleeting with only the memory of one another remains. Notice how Sanchez brutally finishes off his pieces with black splats even deepening his evocation of the affection between these tragic lovers. 
Enduring Decay
More like science projects Future Past shifts the focus to more ethereal and mundane subjects in everyday objects. Imitating the natural process of amber in archeological diggings this series provides a glimpse of how artists like Sanchez can be as ordinary beings live and how their lives evolved.

Sanchez attempts to achieve the pale yellow orange effect of amber as his resin fossilizes whatever brought to its attention. Attracted to the intricacies of the method he makes up for what his pieces represent. For Sanchez it could be a simple shell or as complex as exploding egg shells; they could also be the tools of his artistic trade as an overused paint brush, rubber roller, cutting tool or his daughter’s favorite shoe. They are all extensions of his being expanding notions of time, space, process, or participation how materials obstruct, disrupt and interfere both with his being a struggling artist and a devoted father.
Future Past (Paint Brush)

The given simplicity of materials is complicated with the adverse complexity of his process. Sanchez considers many factors to its mortality such as the thickness of his layers, the volume in pouring his resin which is controlled by its varying temperature. Depending upon how the material behaves with resin is another difficulty. Before the resin dries up he must paint over his pieces to achieve the amber haze finish. Finally Sanchez polishes to smooth to be lighted on a customized pedestal.

 
Future Past (Daughter's Shoe)

Coming from a well-appointed position, Sanchez has revived that bygone debate on what and how conceptual art is. For viewers these pieces could be easier seen than done yet it is that element of surprise that grabs them which shows the wit and candor of Sanchez. How each visual and physical memory by the random selection of material evokes like a time capsule is effective in its own context. 








Inspired by the natural desire for the uncharted lies the artistic prowess of Sanchez in capturing what we have been missing out and looking forward to. While 
he makes us conscious of the things we do not see, he transports us to our current actuation and opportunities. With his experiments, we need to step back and marvel at his art’s exuberance for he has captured our evolving mortal transience. In an appropriated time our short lives can be told through Facebook, Instagram, You Tube, but only in Sanchez’s boxes of curiosity and wonder can life be resurrected and celebrated.




Unearthed is ongoing at the West Gallery, West Ave. Quezon City

28.5.08

A Heart Humbled by God, and Other Expressions of Faith

BY MADS BAJARIAS | I find that it takes a fair amount of self-reflection and maturity before an artist attempts a self-portrait. When 23-year-old artist Mark Andy Garcia sent me a picture of his “Self-Portrait with A Two-Edged Sword” to view, I was struck by what I believed to be a strong biblical undercurrent in the image of the “two-edged sword” being held by a seated figure with a bleeding heart.

I haven’t read the Bible in the long time but I vaguely recall that the image of a two-edged sword was meant to convey how the Word of God was sharper than the deadliest weapon. Many past masters have used the Bible as an inspiration for their art, and the young Garcia follows in this long and illustrious tradition.

I had the good fortune to ask Garcia a few questions about “Self-Portrait with A Two-Edged Sword.”

Tell us about the medium you used and the dimensions of this piece.

MAG: Oil on canvas, 48 x 36 inches, painted in 2008.

Where and when was this painting first shown?

MAG: It's being shown at West Gallery in Quezon City until June 11.

Does this work refer to a Bible passage about the word of God being sharper than a two-edged sword? If not, what does the two-edged sword mean?

MAG: Yes, it’s something like that. The image of the Word of God being sharper than any double-edged sword is from Hebrews 4:12. But there is also a personal context to it: in the portrait, the double-edged sword in my hand refers to my being both a Christian and an artist who seeks to find the truth.

Do you consider yourself on a spiritual mission? What mission is this?

MAG: I belong to the Lighthouse Bible Baptist Church. It is the mission of each member of the New Testament Church to spread the Word about the Savior and salvation through Jesus Christ. As an artist I take it as my personal ministry to create paintings with evangelical themes. I feel that it is my responsibility. It’s like being a preacher. A preacher tries his best to spread the Word of God to many different audiences. Sometimes, he is listened to, sometimes he is ignored or even refuted and scorned. It can’t be helped. That is like how I feel—I cannot control how people will react to me or my mission, but I am certain of my role and I perform my duty the best I can.

There is what looks like a bloody gash on the figure's left breast, can you tell us about that?

MAG: That is meant to represent my heart humbled in the presence of God. To be honest, it was only after I had finished the painting that I added the blood on the heart. My art is my journal where I record my thoughts and feelings. I am the first to feel blessed whenever I finish a painting which was inspired by the Bible or by the lessons from my pastor’s preaching. Even before I show the painting to anyone, I feel blessed, and it is as if my heart melts ("parang nalulusaw") when it is touched by the Word of God.

Can you tell us where the idea behind this self-portrait came from?

MAG: It was inspired by Acts 1:8, “But ye shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you; and ye will be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in all Samaria, and unto the ends of the earth.” I guess I combined the idea of Hebrews 4:12 about the Word of God being sharper than any two-edged sword and Acts 1:8, and I related these messages to my personal life as a Christian and artist and I suddenly realized that the process of thinking about all these ideas was beginning to produce something special. The result of this was the self-portrait.

What do you think is the appeal of this painting to those who have seen it?

MAG: I think the strong contrast between the image of the sword and the meek appearance of the seated figure is the reason that this painting has received the attention of many.

What age were you when you made this self-portrait? Some artists create a series of self-portraits as they grow older to mark the passage of time and the changes in them. What does this self-portrait say about this stage of your life?

MAG: I painted it this year. I am 23 years old. I agree that it would be interesting to do self-portraits as one grows older. I wonder how I would look like in the next one? (Smiles).

The distant houses to the right of the seated figure look like non-Philippine-styled houses, can you tell us why you placed them there on the canvas?

MAG: In Acts 1:8, three places are mentioned: Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria. These places represent the journey of a Christian. Jerusalem represents the places where a Christian starts spreading the Word of God. It means the place where you, your friends and family live. When a Christian’s mission is done in Jerusalem, he moves to the next town, represented by Judea. After Judea, the Christian moves farther and to more distant places represented by Samaria. Anywhere he goes, no matter how far, God will always be with him. As written in Matthew, “I’m always with you even unto the end of the world.”

Can you tell us when you started painting?

MAG: I started painting in 2003 when I was still a student. That was also the time I started joining art competitions. After I finished college in 2005, I worked as a graphic designer, then after seven months I worked abroad for a year. When I came back last year I made a decision to become a full-time artist. This was what I wanted to do—to paint.

Which painters would you say influenced your current style?

MAG: If you're asking which painters I admire, I'd say the Impressionists and Expressionists like Vincent Van Gogh, Edvard Munch and Paul Cezanne. Who else? I can’t think of other names now. I like art which is based on personal experiences. I like artists who are true to themselves.

Where can people go to see your works?

MAG: My show is still ongoing at West Gallery, West Avenue in Quezon City, until June 11.

Thank you very much, Andy.

Salamat din sa 'yo.